Three civilians, soldier killed in Pak-Indian border firing

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Three civilians, soldier killed in Pak-Indian border firing
Pakistani villagers show remains of artillery fired by Indian forces at the border village of Chaprar situated on the Pakistan-Indian border, in Pakistan, on Monday.

Islamabad - The firing took place across the border between Indian-held Kashmir and Pakistan's Punjab province in the villages of Harpal, Pukhlian and Charwah, the statement said

By AFP

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Published: Mon 24 Oct 2016, 3:43 PM

Last updated: Mon 24 Oct 2016, 9:44 PM

 Two children and another civilian were killed along with a soldier in firing across the border between India and Pakistan, officials from both sides said on Monday, as tensions soar between the nuclear-armed rivals.
Pakistan's military said an 18-month-old girl and another civilian were killed on its side of the border in "unprovoked firing" by the Indian army.
"Due to Indian unprovoked firing last night a civilian, Mohammed Latif of village Janglora, and a minor Haniya, age one and a half, embraced shahadat (martyrdom) while seven civilians were injured," a military statement said.
The firing took place across the border between Indian-held Kashmir and Pakistan's Punjab province in the villages of Harpal, Pukhlian and Charwah, the statement said.
Indian police said the heavy exchange of firing occurred in its Pura sector early on Monday morning, killing an Indian border security guard and a six-year-old boy.
The Border Security Force (BSF) soldier died after he received splinters from a mortar shell fired by Pakistan rangers, Danish Rana, inspector general of police for the area, said.
"The boy and the BSF soldier died during the intense exchange of small arms fire and mortars throughout the night along the border," Rana said.
Six other civilians were also injured during the exchange, said another Indian police officer.
Relations between the two countries have plummeted in recent months, with India blaming Pakistani militants for a raid on an army base in its part of disputed Kashmir in September that killed 19 soldiers. India later said it launched "surgical strikes" across the border in Pakistan on militant targets, prompting fury from Pakistan which denied the raids took place.
Pakistani and Indian troops regularly exchange fire across their de-facto border in Kashmir, but rarely send ground troops over the line.
The overnight incident comes days after Indian border security forces claimed they shot dead seven Pakistani soldiers in retaliation for a ceasefire violation, with Pakistan rubbishing the claims.
Tensions have been high between the two nuclear armed neighbours since July 20 when Indian security forces killed a popular Kashmiri commander Burhan Muzaffar Wani.
Muslim-majority Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan, but claimed in full by both, since the two countries gained independence from Britain in 1947.
Since 1989 several rebel groups have been fighting Indian forces deployed in the region, seeking independence or a merger of the territory with Pakistan.


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